Profile of Joachim Messing PROFILE Brian Doctrow, Science Writer

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Profile of Joachim Messing PROFILE Brian Doctrow, Science Writer PROFILE Profile of Joachim Messing PROFILE Brian Doctrow, Science Writer Joachim Messing’s father did not initially approve of cholesterol and fatty acid me- his son’s decision to become a scientist. “He was a tabolism. Lynen advised Mess- mason,” Messing explains, “and was hoping that I ing not to go into Lynen’sown would just take over his business.” His mother, how- field, where much of the im- ever, was more supportive, “because she didn’t like portant work had already been theroughclimateontheconstructionsites.” Fortu- done. Lynen then told Mess- nately for science, his mother prevailed. Messing, ing that the future would be the director of the Waksman Institute of Microbiology in DNA, and arranged for Mess- and the Waksman chair of Molecular Genetics at ing to work in a laboratory Rutgers University, was elected to the National Acad- studying DNA at the Max Planck emy of Sciences in 2015. The DNA sequencing tech- Institute for Biochemistry in nique he developed made possible the subsequent Munich. Joachim Messing. Image courtesy of Michael sequencing of whole genomes, including the human Seul (photographer). genome. Beginning of Shotgun Sequencing From Pharmacy to Laboratory For his graduate research, Messing studied DNA repli- Joachim Messing, known as “Jo” (pronounced yoh), cation, and got off to what he calls “a lucky start.” At that grew up in the town of Duisburg, Germany, in the time, it was known that the enzyme DNA polymerase aftermath of World War II. The first person in his family required a primer to begin DNA replication, but the to go to college, he decided to study pharmacy as an identity of the primer was unknown. Early on in his undergraduate. At that time, a degree in biochemistry graduate research, Messing learned about a plasmid was not an option for undergraduates. Pharmacy that could replicate in the absence of protein synthesis. appealed to Messing, in part, because the curriculum He quickly demonstrated that the same plasmid covered a broad range of subjects, including organic could not replicate in the absence of RNA synthesis, and inorganic chemistry, botany, and even physics. suggesting that RNA acted as a primer for DNA po- “You had to learn how to look under the microscope lymerase. “That was probably the first evidence of a and draw cells,” Messing recalls, “you had to learn noncoding RNA in vivo,” Messing explains. The find- about the different pathways in plants that make ing was published in Nature New Biology, only three important substances that could be used for ther- months after Messing began his graduate research (1). apy...you had everything.” Studying pharmacy would Messing received his doctorate in biochemistry from also allow him to earn money to pay for his education the Ludwig Maximillian University of Munich in 1975. by working as a pharmacist. After that time, he stayed on as a research fellow at the For the first two years of the pharmacy curriculum, Max Planck Institute, where he began the work that Messing had to work as a pharmacist’s apprentice. would lead to shotgun sequencing. In 1974, while still The pharmacy where he did his apprenticeship was working on his doctorate, Messing attended a confer- across from the German Opera on the Rhine in Duis- ence on restriction enzymes in Ghent, Belgium, where burg. In the evenings, after working at the pharmacy, Frederick Sanger reported on his efforts to sequence he would work as an extra with the opera company. the single-stranded genome of bacteriophage ΦΧ174. The high point of his opera career, Messing says, was Sanger was using a time-consuming procedure that getting to carry the actress playing Gilda down a involved cleaving the double-stranded version of the flight of stairs in a production of Rigoletto. phage DNA with a restriction enzyme, separating the Messing received a bachelor’s degree in pharmacy fragments by gel electrophoresis, extracting each frag- in 1968 and a master’s degree in pharmacy in 1971. ment from the gel, denaturing the fragments, and using When he decided to pursue a doctorate in bio- the denatured fragments as primers on the viral single- chemistry, he met with the biochemist Feodor Lynen, stranded DNA for sequencing by DNA synthesis. Messing who had won the Nobel Prize in 1964 for work on thought that the sequencing process could be accelerated This is a Profile of a recently elected member of the National Academy of Sciences to accompany the member’s Inaugural Article on Page 7949. www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1608857113 PNAS | July 19, 2016 | vol. 113 | no. 29 | 7935–7937 Downloaded by guest on October 4, 2021 by cloning each fragment into a single-stranded DNA improved levels of the essential amino acids lysine and phage vector. In this way, all of the fragments could be methionine, and to pest-resistant crop strains. sequenced in parallel, each using the same primer. In 1983, the Waksman Institute of Microbiology at There was just one obstacle—a suitable vector did Rutgers University sent Messing an offer to become not yet exist, so Messing had to create one. A suitable their new research director. Recognizing the name, vector had to provide a means of rapidly detecting Messing dug through some old photographs and cells containing the cloned inserts. For this purpose, found one of himself as an undergraduate with Selman Messing developed the blue-white screen, in which a Waksman, the institute’s namesake, who had won the gene on the vector turns bacterial colonies blue when Nobel Prize in 1952 for methods leading to the dis- grown on a special medium unless the vector contains covery of streptomycin, the first antibiotic treatment a cloned insert. The first intermediate to incorporate for tuberculosis. “So I said to my wife, ‘oh, you know, the visible marker, M13mp1, was published in PNAS maybe I should have a look,’” he recalls. Messing de- in 1977 (2). Next, Messing had to insert an artificial cided to come to Rutgers because he felt it was a place restriction site for cloning DNA fragments into the where he could really make an impact. Messing arrived visible marker gene. The gene contained a sequence at Rutgers in 1985, where, in addition to taking over that differed from a restriction site by only one nu- the directorship of the Waksman Institute, he was also cleotide; it had a G instead of an A. Methylation of tenured as a university professor. the G base induced mispairing, which converted the G to A in subsequent rounds of replication. “I think the New Frontiers biggest moment in all the research that I’ve done was Today, Messing continues to expand the possibilities of certainly the day when I went into the darkroom to genome sequencing. In his Inaugural Article (6), he re- look at...whether the restriction site was there or not ports testing a single-molecule sequencing platform in the right place,” Messing recalls. “It was unusual from the sequencing company Pacific Biosciences that timing because, a week later, I had to go to the Cold can sequence very long stretches of DNA in the maize Spring Harbor phage meeting... and you never have genome. Eukaryotic genomes contain many duplicate things that work in time [for meetings]... but in this sequences, which prevent the reassembly of entire case, it really worked like a charm.” The results were chromosomal regions from sequenced fragments if the published in Nature in early 1978 (3). fragments are too short. The new platform overcomes this difficulty and could become important for studies of Move to the United States and Plant Genetics the human genome and of diseases such as cancer. In 1978, Messing moved to the University of California, According to Messing, the greatest challenge was San Francisco for a few months, and then to the University finding a computer cluster powerful enough to handle of California, Davis, where he continued to refine his the massive amounts of data produced. Ultimately, shotgun sequencing system. With the help of researchers Messing and his colleagues had to enlist the help of at the biotechnology firm Genentech, he developed Amazon’s computing services. The study illustrated that synthetic oligonucleotide primers and used synthetic advances in sequencing have come not only from the DNA adapters to introduce multiple restriction sites into development and implementation of new techniques the phage vector, allowing different types of restriction but also from progress in computing power. fragments to be cloned (4). In the first successful dem- Messing’s contributions to DNA sequencing and onstration of the shotgun sequencing method, Messing plant genetic engineering have won him numerous and a plant pathologist, Robert Shepherd, sequenced the awards, including the 2013 Wolf Prize in Agriculture 8-kb genome of the cauliflower mosaic virus (5). By that and the 2014 Promega Biotechnology Research time, Messing had taken a faculty position at the Uni- Award. In 1991, the Institute for Scientific Information versity of Minnesota. in Philadelphia declared him the world’s most cited Meanwhile, Messing began applying the techniques scientist of the previous decade. Messing gets great he had developed to the study of plant genetics. “Isaw satisfaction from the knowledge that his work has left and right how people said ‘well, the future is going made possible subsequent life-saving developments, to be in eukaryotic DNA, you can’t keep working with such as the production of recombinant erythropoietin microbes,’” Messing recalls. Studying plants appealed for treating anemia following chemotherapy. “There is to him, in part, because of his pharmacy background, no doubt,” he says, “that genome sequencing and and also because of the potential practical applications engineered genes had an unforeseen impact on pro- for nutrition.
Recommended publications
  • Preparing for Future Products of Biotechnology
    THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS This PDF is available at http://nap.edu/24605 SHARE Preparing for Future Products of Biotechnology DETAILS 230 pages | 7 x 10 | PAPERBACK ISBN 978-0-309-45205-2 | DOI 10.17226/24605 CONTRIBUTORS GET THIS BOOK Committee on Future Biotechnology Products and Opportunities to Enhance Capabilities of the Biotechnology Regulatory System; Board on Life Sciences; Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources; Board on Chemical Sciences and FIND RELATED TITLES Technology; Division on Earth and Life Studies; National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Visit the National Academies Press at NAP.edu and login or register to get: – Access to free PDF downloads of thousands of scientific reports – 10% off the price of print titles – Email or social media notifications of new titles related to your interests – Special offers and discounts Distribution, posting, or copying of this PDF is strictly prohibited without written permission of the National Academies Press. (Request Permission) Unless otherwise indicated, all materials in this PDF are copyrighted by the National Academy of Sciences. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Preparing for Future Products of Biotechnology Preparing for Future Products of Biotechnology Committee on Future Biotechnology Products and Opportunities to Enhance Capabilities of the Biotechnology Regulatory System Board on Life Sciences Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources Board on Chemical Sciences and Technology Division on Earth and Life Studies A Report of Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Preparing for Future Products of Biotechnology THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS 500 Fifth Street, NW Washington, DC 20001 This activity was supported by Contract No.
    [Show full text]
  • Jane Shen-Miller Food Innovation Fellowships Prize
    November/December 2019 • Volume 46, Number 6 p. 13 p. 15 p. 17 Leon Kochian ASPB Members Where Are They Receives Receive HHMI Now? International Hanna Gray Jane Shen-Miller Food Innovation Fellowships Prize THE NEWSLETTER OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PLANT BIOLOGISTS President’s Letter The Transparency Project BY JUDY CALLIS ASPB President, University of California, Davis he word transparent has multiple mean- ings. For us scientists, we might first Tthink of a solution in a tube or vial be- ing transparent, defined by Merriam-Webster Blake Meyers as “having the property of transmitting light without appreciable scattering so that bodies Appointed Next lying beyond are seen clearly” (https://www. merriam-webster.com/dictionary/transpar- Editor of ent). As in, did your chemical dissolve? But the The Plant Cell transparency to which I refer is the second set of definitions in the dictionary: “free from pre- tense or deceit,” “readily understood,” and most relevant for this letter, “characterized by vis- SPB is pleased to announce the ap- ibility or accessibility of information especially pointment of Blake C. Meyers as concerning business practices.” editor-in-chief of The Plant Cell be- A ASPB is an active and multifaceted orga- ginning January 1, 2020. The Plant Cell pub- nization with diverse activities including lishes novel research of particular significance outreach, professional development, publish- in plant biology, especially in the areas of ing, and advocacy, among others. Because of well. In the fall of 2015, the main leadership cellular biology, molecular biology, genetics, these various endeavors, understanding how committee, previously called the Executive development, and evolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Publish Or Perish
    ASPB News THE NEWSLETTER OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PLANT BIOLOGISTS Volume 31, Number 1 January/February 2004 President’s Letter Inside This Issue Publish or Perish Plant Genetics 2003: Mechanisms of Genetic Variation As I sit curled up in front of the fire with the current ASPB has been publishing online since 1998, and print issue of Plant Physiology, I am thinking about the full text of The Plant Cell, back to volume 1 Networking Made publishing not from the point of view of the indi- (1989), is freely available as searchable PDFs in the Simple: The New MAC Database vidual investigator, but from the point of view of a journal’s archive at www.plantcell.org (as well as the publisher. National Library of Medicine’s PubMedCentral). Congress Increases There are many issues facing ASPB as the publish- Plant Physiology is online back to 1993 (www.plant- Funding for Plant Genome Research ing world moves more and more toward electronic physiol.org) and will soon be digitized back to vol- delivery of its journals. As a scholarly, not-for-profit ume 1 (1926). Its archive will also be free to anyone publisher, the Society is joining together with other with Internet access. like-minded organizations such as the Genetics The key to our ongoing success as publishers, of Society of America and Cold Spring Harbor Press in course, will be to continue to publish the best papers a new initiative to reaffirm our commitment to inno- in plant biology and to keep our journals at the cut- vative and independent publishing practices and to ting edge with respect not only to content, but also to wide dissemination of the information contained in content delivery.
    [Show full text]
  • Read the Full PDF
    Trim 1/2 in off the top of all covers Front edge of spine-----------8.875in from the front edge of the paper. Trim small here ----- Trim large here --- *Small covers trim to (14.625 x 9.4) *Large covers trim to (18.875 x 11.4) Let Them Eat Precaution Let Them Eat Precaution How Politics Is Undermining the Genetic Revolution in Agriculture Edited by Jon Entine The AEI Press Publisher for the American Enterprise Institute WASHINGTON, D.C. Distributed to the Trade by National Book Network, 15200 NBN Way, Blue Ridge Summit, PA 17214. To order call toll free 1-800-462-6420 or 1-717-794-3800. For all other inquiries please contact the AEI Press, 1150 Seventeenth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036 or call 1-800-862-5801. This publication, and the research and conference that led to it, were funded by the American Enterprise Institute’s National Research Initiative and by AEI’s Inez and William Mabie Endowment for Agricultural Policy Research. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Let them eat precaution: how politics is undermining the genetic revolu- tion in agriculture / edited by Jon Entine p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8447-4200-7 (cloth: alk. paper) 1. Plant biotechnology. 2. Plant biotechnology—Social aspects. 3. Transgenic plants. 4. Transgenic plants—Risk assessment. 5. Food supply. I. Entine, Jon. SB106.B56L48 2005 631.5'233—dc22 2005007449 11 10 09 08 07 06 1 2 3 4 5 6 © 2006 by the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, Washington, D.C.
    [Show full text]
  • A Difficult Decision
    July/August 2021 • Volume 48, Number 4 p. 5 p. 6 p. 9 Yunde Zhao to Plant Synthetic Plant Scientists Become the Next Biology 2021 Elected to the 2021 Editor-in-Chief Class of the U.S. of Plant Physiology® September 25–27 National Academy of Sciences THE NEWSLETTER OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PLANT BIOLOGISTS President’s Letter 2021 ASPB Election Results A Difficult Decision any thanks to those members who BY MAUREEN McCANN took the time to vote earlier this ASPB President, National Renewable Energy Laboratory Msummer, and hearty congratula- tions to our newly elected Board members! Their new service roles for ASPB will begin on October 1, 2021, and you can look for more major focus of ballots are certified and information about them in the next issue of ASPB is science applies limits on access the ASPB News. Apolicy and how it to voting that have been impacts research funding, widely interpreted to target the pipeline of talent into marginalized communi- our labs, and regulatory ties, most recently by the practices. In the United U.S. Department of Justice. States, our Science Policy The passing of this law Committee engages on our was a challenge for ASPB. behalf with federal fund- After staff members and ing agencies and legislators the Program Committee from both parties to raise visited the city in early awareness of, and advocate March 2020, the ASPB for, the critical importance Board of Directors (BoD) of plant biology. ASPB does voted to approve the Incoming President-elect Gustavo MacIntosh not and cannot engage in partisan politics.
    [Show full text]
  • Joachim W. Messing 1946–2019
    Joachim W. Messing 1946–2019 A Biographical Memoir by Hugo K. Dooner, Robert M. Goodman, Pal Maliga, and Marja Timmermans ©2020 National Academy of Sciences. Any opinions expressed in this memoir are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Academy of Sciences. JOACHIM W. MESSING September 10, 1946–September 13, 2019 Elected to the NAS, 2015 Joachim Messing, through a long string of ground- breaking accomplishments in genetics and evolutionary biology, virtually laid the foundations of the multibil- lion-dollar industries populating the various sectors of the life sciences. His most noteworthy early successes were the development of methods of gene sequencing that greatly simplified this blossoming science as well as the so-called shotgun sequencing of DNA. He sought no ownership protection for his brilliant and original discov- eries, enabling research biologists and industrial devel- opers the world over to build on them. Born in Germany, Messing earned a B.S. in pharmacy in Dusseldorf (1968), an M.S. in pharmacology from the Free By Hugo K. Dooner, Robert University of Berlin (1971), and a doctorate in biochem- M. Goodman, Pal Maliga, and istry and pharmacy from Ludwig Maximilian University Marja Timmermans in Munich (1975). After a three-year stint as a research associate at the Max Planck Institute in Munich, Messing moved in 1978 to the University of California at Davis as a research associate in bacteriology. From there he accepted a tenure-track assistant professorship at the University of Minnesota in 1980, rising to full professor in just four years.
    [Show full text]
  • Analysis of the Genome Sequence of the ¯Owering Plant Arabidopsis Thaliana
    articles Analysis of the genome sequence of the ¯owering plant Arabidopsis thaliana The Arabidopsis Genome Initiative* * Authorship of this paper should be cited as `The Arabidopsis Genome Iniative'. A full list of contributors appears at the end of this paper ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ The ¯owering plant Arabidopsis thaliana is an important model system for identifying genes and determining their functions. Here we report the analysis of the genomic sequence of Arabidopsis. The sequenced regions cover 115.4 megabases of the 125-megabase genome and extend into centromeric regions. The evolution of Arabidopsis involved a whole-genome duplication, followed by subsequent gene loss and extensive local gene duplications, giving rise to a dynamic genome enriched by lateral gene transfer from a cyanobacterial-like ancestor of the plastid. The genome contains 25,498 genes encoding proteins from 11,000 families, similar to the functional diversity of Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegansÐ the other sequenced multicellular eukaryotes. Arabidopsis has many families of new proteins but also lacks several common protein families, indicating that the sets of common proteins have undergone differential expansion and contraction in the three multicellular eukaryotes. This is the ®rst complete genome sequence of a plant and provides the foundations for more comprehensive comparison of conserved processes in all eukaryotes, identifying a wide range of plant-speci®c gene functions and establishing rapid systematic ways to identify genes for crop improvement. The plant and animal kingdoms evolved independently from biologists, but will also affect agricultural science, evolutionary unicellular eukaryotes and represent highly contrasting life forms. biology, bioinformatics, combinatorial chemistry, functional and The genome sequences of C.
    [Show full text]
  • In Loving Memory of Professor Joachim Messing, a Pioneer From
    Li et al. Rice (2019) 12:98 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12284-019-0343-5 OBITUARY Open Access In Loving Memory of Professor Joachim Messing, a Pioneer from Molecular Genetics to Plant Genomics Yin Li* , Jennifer Ayer, Paul Fourounjian, Jiaqiang Dong, Zhiyong Zhang, Chenxu Liu and Fan Feng We deeply grieve that our beloved and respected mentor and colleague, Dr. Joachim (Jo) Messing, the member of Advisory Board of Rice, passed away at the age of 73. He was a University Distinguished Professor at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (Rutgers University here- after), Director of the Waksman Institute of Microbiology, and the Selman A. Waksman Chair Professor of Molecu- lar Genetics. Jo is survived by his wife Rita, son Simon and his wife Lisa, and three grandchildren (Daniel, Lukas and Henry). He is also survived by sister Angelika; a devoted staff; and many colleagues and friends. Messing was born on Sep.10th 1946 in Duisburg, Germany. Jo grew up in a working-class family, amid the ruins and food insecurity that followed World War II. This childhood experience would foster his later ambitions to enhance food security and end world hunger. Messing re- ceived his Bachelor of Science and Master of Science in Pharmacy in 1968 and 1971, respectively. Following the Dr. Joachim Messing (1946-2019) suggestion of Nobel Laureate biochemist Feodor Lynen that “the future would be in understanding DNA,” he chose molecular biology for his doctorate study, working as the director of the Waksman Institute until passing on the replication of DNA plasmids. Messing obtained his away unexpectedly on Sep 13th.
    [Show full text]
  • Scientists in Support of Agricultural Biotechnology
    Scientists In Support Of Agricultural Biotechnology We, the undersigned members of the scientific community, believe that recombinant DNA techniques constitute powerful and safe means for the modification of organisms and can contribute substantially in enhancing quality of life by improving agriculture, health care, and the environment. The responsible genetic modification of plants is neither new nor dangerous. Many characteristics, such as pest and disease resistance, have been routinely introduced into crop plants by traditional methods of sexual reproduction or cell culture procedures. The addition of new or different genes into an organism by recombinant DNA techniques does not inherently pose new or heightened risks relative to the modification of organisms by more traditional methods, and the relative safety of marketed products is further ensured by current regulations intended to safeguard the food supply. The novel genetic tools offer greater flexibility and precision in the modification of crop plants. No food products, whether produced with recombinant DNA techniques or with more traditional methods, are totally without risk. The risks posed by foods are a function of the biological characteristics of those foods and the specific genes that have been used, not of the processes employed in their development. Our goal as scientists is to ensure that any new foods produced from recombinant DNA are as safe or safer than foods already being consumed. Current methods of regulation and development have worked well. Recombinant DNA techniques have already been used to develop 'environmentally-friendly' crop plants with traits that preserve yields and allow farmers to reduce their use of synthetic pesticides and herbicides.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2017
    WAKSMAN INSTITUTE of Microbiology ANNUAL REPORT 2016-2017 ABOUT US The Waksman Institute of Microbiology is an interdisciplinary research institute devoted to excellence in basic re- search, located on Busch Campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Focus areas include developmental biology, cell biology, biochemistry, structural biology, genetics, and genomics. The Institute employs faculty teams that concentrate on certain classes of organisms amenable to genetic analysis such as bacteria and fungi (E. coli and yeast), animal systems (e.g., Drosophila), and plants (Arabidopsis, tobacco, and maize). Although the Institute focuses on basic questions in microbial, animal, and plant research, it continues to engage in extensive technology transfer of its basic discoveries. To support the educational mission of Rutgers, Waksman faculty members hold appointments in academic depart- ments throughout the University. Our researchers train undergraduate students, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows, as well as engage high school students in research through an outreach program. Giving The Waksman Institute is supported by Rutgers University, its endowment and research grants, and gifts from private foundations and individuals. Gifts provide valuable resources to enhance research initiatives and increase student opportunities. Donors may choose to contribute either to the Institute’s operating budget, or to a specific initiative. For more information, contact Robert Rossi, Executive Director for Administration and Finance: 848-445-3937, rossi@ waksman.rutgers.edu. Waksman Institute of Microbiology Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 190 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA Phone: 848-445-3425, Fax: 732-445-5735 Email: [email protected] www.waksman.rutgers.edu FACULTY & STAFF Director, Joachim Messing Professors G.
    [Show full text]
  • Waksman Institute of Microbiology
    Waksman Institute of Microbiology Annual Report 2018 - 2019 ABOUT US The Waksman Institute of Microbiology is an interdisciplinary research institute devoted to excellence in basic re- search, located on Busch Campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Focus areas include developmental biology, cell biology, biochemistry, structural biology, genetics, and genomics. The Institute employs faculty teams that concentrate on certain organisms amenable to genetic analysis such as bacte- ria and fungi (E. coli and yeast), animal systems (e.g., Drosophila and C. elegans), and plants (Arabidopsis, tobacco, and maize). Although the Institute focuses on basic questions in microbial, animal, and plant research, it continues to engage in extensive technology transfer of its basic discoveries. To support the educational mission of Rutgers, Waksman faculty members hold appointments in academic depart- ments throughout the University. Our researchers train undergraduate students, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows, as well as engage high school students in research through an outreach program. Giving The Waksman Institute is supported by Rutgers University, its endowment and research grants, and gifts from private foundations and individuals. Gifts provide valuable resources to enhance research initiatives and increase student opportunities. Donors may choose to contribute either to the Institute’s operating budget, or to a specific initiative. For more information, contact Robert Rossi, Executive Director for Administration and Finance: 848-445-3937, [email protected]. Waksman Institute of Microbiology Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 190 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA Phone: 848-445-3425, Fax: 732-445-5735 Email: [email protected] www.waksman.rutgers.edu 1 istry in 1980, and by 1984 was a full professor there.
    [Show full text]